ROBYN HALPRIN and RICK HALPRIN, Plaintiffs-Appellants, v. THE PRAIRIE SINGLE FAMILY HOMES OF DEARBORN PARK ASSOCIATION, et al., Defendants-Appellees.
No. 02-2975
United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit
ARGUED SEPTEMBER 27, 2004—DECIDED NOVEMBER 4, 2004
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division. No. 01 C 4673—James H. Alesia, Judge.
POSNER, Circuit Judge. The district court dismissed this suit under the Fair Housing Act,
The complaint—our only source of facts, because the suit was dismissed for failure to state a claim—alleges the following: One of the plaintiffs is Jewish. The president of the association wrote “H-town property” on a wall of the plaintiffs’ property, “H-town” being short for “Hymie Town,” and he further vandalized the property by damaging trees and plants and cutting down strings of holiday lights. When the plaintiffs posted flyers offering a reward for identifying the vandal, the president destroyed or removed the flyers. To further thwart the plaintiffs’ efforts to investigate the vandalizing of their property, the association destroyed minutes of its board meetings and erased a tape recording of a meeting at which the president had threatened to “make an example” of the plaintiffs. The defendants applied chemicals to the plaintiffs’ yard against the plaintiffs’ wishes and with adverse effects on their health and peace of mind and adopted rules restricting the plaintiffs’ lawful use of their property. The entire campaign of harassment was caused or at least influenced by the religion of the Jewish plaintiff. Of course we do not vouch for any of these allegations, but for purposes of this appeal we must assume that they are true.
A section of the Fair Housing Act makes it unlawful “to coerce, intimidate, threaten, or interfere with any person in the exercise or enjoyment of, or on account of his having exercised or enjoyed, or on account of his having aided or encouraged any other person in the exercise or enjoyment of, any right granted or protected by section 3603, 3604, 3605, or 3606 of this title.”
As a purely semantic matter the statutory language might be stretched far enough to reach a case of “constructive eviction,” which is one way to describe the present case (more precisely, “attempted constructive eviction“). If you burn down someone‘s house you make it “unavailable” to him, and “privileges of sale or rental” might conceivably be thought to include the privilege of inhabiting the premises. Acts of post-sale discrimination have been litigated successfully under the Act in two reported cases, Trafficante v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co., 409 U.S. 205 (1972); Krueger v. Cuomo, 115 F.3d 487 (7th Cir. 1997), but in neither was the Act‘s applicability to such discrimination discussed—apparently the issue hadn‘t been raised. In several other cases the Act has been held to forbid harassment amounting to constructive eviction by analogy to “constructive discharge,” a form of discrimination recognized in Title VII cases. DiCenso v. Cisneros, 96 F.3d 1004, 1008 (7th Cir. 1996); Neudecker v. Boisclair Corp., 351 F.3d 361, 364-65 (8th Cir. 2003) (per curiam); Honce v. Vigil, 1 F.3d 1085, 1090 (10th Cir. 1993). But in none of these cases did the court consider the difference in language between the two statutes. None of the five cases contains a considered holding on the scope of the Fair Housing Act in general or its application to a case like the present one in particular.
Title VII protects the job holder as well as the job applicant, so an employer who resorts to harassment to force an employee to quit is engaged in job discrimination within the meaning of the Act. See, e.g., Herrnreiter v. Chicago Housing Authority, 315 F.3d 742, 744-45 (7th Cir. 2002). The Fair Housing Act contains no hint either in its language or its legislative history of a concern with anything but access to housing. Bernard Schwartz, Statutory History of the United States: Civil Rights Part II 1709-17, 1742-51, 1762, 1769 (1970); Hearings before the Subcomm. on Housing & Urban Affairs of the S. Comm. on Banking & Currency on S. 1358, S. 2114, and S. 2280, 90th Cong., 1st Sess. (1967), passim; 114 Cong. Rec. S2274 (daily ed. Feb. 6, 1968) (statement of Sen. Mondale). Behind the Act lay the widespread practice of refusing to sell or rent homes in desirable residential areas to members of minority groups. Since the focus was on their exclusion, the problem of how they were treated when they were included, that is, when they were allowed to own or rent homes in such areas, was not at the forefront of congressional thinking. That problem—the problem not of exclusion but of expulsion—would become acute only when the law forced unwanted associations that might provoke efforts at
Reference to legislative history is criticized when it is used to give a statute a reach that exceeds what its words suggest. Our use here is the opposite; it is to confirm that the words mean what they seem to mean.
So the plaintiffs have no claim under section
But this conclusion reckons without a regulation issued by the Department of Housing and Urban Development that in the name of section
The remaining question is whether the conduct alleged in the complaint amounts to “threatening, intimidating or interfering” within the meaning of the statute and the regulation. The defendants argue that it does not, because it is far less ominous, frightening, or hurtful than burning a cross in a neighbor‘s front yard or assaulting the neighbor physically. But that cannot be the test. There are other, less violent but still effective, methods by which a person can be driven from his home and thus “interfered” with in his enjoyment of it. See, e.g., Krueger v. Cuomo, supra, 115 F.3d at 490-91 (sexual harassment); Regional Economic Community Action Program, Inc. v. City of Middletown, 294 F.3d 35, 43-44 (2d Cir. 2002) (economic pressure); Walker v. City of Lakewood, 272 F.3d 1114, 1126-31 (9th Cir. 2001) (same). Of course, to repeat an earlier point, we do not want, and we do not think Congress wanted, to convert every quarrel among neighbors in which a racial or religious slur is hurled into a federal case. But what is alleged in this case (as in the factually similar case of Ohana v. 180 Prospect Place Realty Corp., 996 F. Supp. 238, 239 (E.D.N.Y. 1998)) is a pattern of harassment, invidiously motivated, and, because backed by the homeowners’ association to which the plaintiffs belong, a matter of the neighbors’ ganging up on them. We are far from a simple quarrel between two neighbors or the isolated act of harassment committed by the landlord in DiCenso v. Cisneros, supra, 96 F.3d at 1006.
AFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED IN PART, AND REMANDED.
A true Copy:
Teste:
_____________________________
Clerk of the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
USCA-02-C-0072—11-4-04
